May I throw a few odd balls in there to be identified?
and the 2nd to last forskahlii picture I think is vittatus, just my opinion this is what I consider as forskhalii over the years, a smaller specie, slender body, and short jaw. but then also sometimes I wonder if there is sexual dimorphism in this specie as well. As I've seen goliaths with much longer face and soem with just shorter face.
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Without knowing its collection point, I would call that fish vittatus. I acknowledge its possible that
Hydrocynus cf. "forskahlii population E" could potentially have a colored upper lobe, but I have seen no evidence to indicate this.
This is why type localities are important, and why I posted the body dimension measurements. A very thin vittatus could very well be skinnier than a girthy forskahlii. The second to last forskahlii picture (we're talking about the one of the one caught fishing, right?) was caught in the Nile. It's a very large, thick individual but I still feel its a forskahlii.
The people who caught it identified it as forskahlii, as well. There's not supposed to be vittatus in the Nile per the literature I've read, only fatf and batf.
There is also a considerable amount of variety among vittatus and forskahlii because there are four distinct genetic populations of vatf and two of fatf. These populations await descriptions as subspecies and until they are described, we can only call them vittatus or forskahlii without having any way to more closely attribute which population they are.
We must also allow for variation between individuals and among populations. Allopatric conspecifics can display wild local variation while still fitting species diagnostics.
I also would not be surprised if forskahlii, or even all of Hydrocynus, displayed sexual dimorphism. As I mentioned above, populations of H. vittatus in the Zambezi were found to in fact display sexual dimorphism.
View attachment 844493View attachment 844494I just realized that I have a lot of tigerfish photos obtained here and there...
what about these 2? I still have tons more...
The dead fish, honestly I can't tell from the picture. The second one I would call a member of the vittatus complex if not vatf
sensu stricto.
tanzaniae or brevis? Next will the be juvenile pictures of this fish, this fish was raised by a good friend of mine from a young fish. This one is exciting....
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Very deep body; short, stout, deep head; very large adipose fin, 'dirty' color, very dark red lower lobe, poorly formed striping. It has a body depth ratio of 23.7%. Based on this evidence, I would call that fish H. brevis.
edit- Just realized I can make that picture much larger. I counted 48-49 LL scales, again, right in the range for brevis but too many for tanzaniae.
I'm very much looking forward to juvi pics of that fish.